THREE
AS THE rookie was sobbing, a tall man in a dirty gray hoodie cut across Eakins Oval.
When he spied the two cops, he stopped in his tracks. He pulled his phone from his pocket and snapped a photo. Then he inched closer, a stunned expression on his face.
“Hey, back off!” Parks shouted. “Crime scene!”
Too late. The hoodie guy snapped another photo and ran away, thumbing something into his phone as he went.
“Hey! Stop!”
A photo of the vic was going to be online in a matter of seconds. Shit! But what was she supposed to do, chase after him and what? Confiscate his phone? While leaving a rookie alone at his first murder scene?
It turned out that Parks had been right to worry; when the two images of the blood-covered man in the Maserati hit social media, it was over. The news traveled worldwide at breakneck speed. People enlarged the grainy photos until the victim’s face was pixelated but identifiable. The reaction everywhere: utter astonishment.
Some claimed the photos were photoshopped or deep-faked. But most who saw the images believed they were real. The
7
powder-blue Maserati alone was confirmation of the victim’s identity.
Online there was collective grief and an instantaneous outpouring of tributes. There were also macabre jokes, as always. And even though it was well after midnight, locals began to gather at the scene, arriving from Center City and Spring Garden and Fairmount and West Philly. As the crowds got bigger, more images from the crime scene spread online. Some people took awkward selfies in an attempt to place themselves in this historic moment. Some simply stared in shock. Some wept inconsolably, held by their friends.
Fortunately Parks and Sheplavy had been joined by half a dozen other officers from the Ninth, and they’d established a wide perimeter around the car, so between that and the wall of bodies, the victim’s face was largely blocked from view.
Unless you were in a helicopter.
Parks had been right about local TV news always keeping an ear on police radio. An overnight staffer chained to the assignment desk at the local NBC affiliate heard the word Maserati and had a cop friend run the license plate on a whim maybe some local CEO or sports figure had been involved in an embarrassing traffic accident.
But when the Maserati’s owner’s name popped up, the staffer knocked over his Diet Coke in his scramble to get to the assignment editor.
That station’s news chopper was kept at Penn’s Landing, which was thirty minutes from any location in the city. The art museum was so close, however, that the chopper was circling overhead within five minutes. A minute after it arrived, the station was interrupting the local broadcast to go live with footage from the air.
Until they had official word from the Philly police brass that JAMES
PATTERSON 8
meant a captain or higher the station couldn’t confirm exactly who was in the powder-blue Maserati.
But the word was already out, and distraught fans on the street knew the truth.
Philadelphia would never be the same.
LION & LAMB 9
FOUR
1:02 a.m.
HOMICIDE DETECTIVE Mickey Bernstein, forty-three, was the son of a Philly PD homicide legend, Arnold “Arnie” Bernstein.
Dad was famous for working the city’s most violent cases and resolving them with lightning speed, usually thanks to his hunches and gut feelings. He nailed gangsters (the guys who blew up Leo “Chicken Man” Caranchi) and serial killers (coed slayer Herman “the Guru” Bludhorn). Every administration since the early 1960s loved Arnie he got results. Nobody questioned him. Ever.
Arnie’s only son operated in much the same way except Mickey had a degree from UPenn under his belt and extensive forensic training to back up his hunches, so he got even more respect than his famous father.
What was not to love? He was a street-smart cop with an Ivy League degree who knew how to talk to TV and print journalists. Philadelphia magazine had run a fawning profile on him a few years back, and the cover still hung in his parents’ retirement home in Margate, Florida.
If you were doing a true-crime doc about something that happened in Philly and you didn’t check in with Mickey Bernstein, you were just not doing your job.
So when Mickey climbed out of his glossy black Audi A3,
10
murmurs rippled through the crowd, and TV reporters started fighting their way to him. Mickey pushed past them and made a beeline for the crime scene.
The detective was easily identifiable six foot three with the kind of handsome, chiseled face that you see on coins. The looks, people assumed, came from his mother, a statuesque Atlantic City showgirl back in the day. (Arnie was many things, but attractive wasn’t one of them.) In a city starved for celebrities, Mickey Bernstein would probably have been a star even if he weren’t police royalty.
Parks saw the detective approaching and hurried over to meet him. The sooner she could put this scene in Bernstein’s hands, the better.
“Well, this isn’t how I imagined spending my Sunday morning,” Bernstein said with a sly smile. “Are you the one who caught this?”
“Yeah, me and Sheplavy. He’s my partner.”
Bernstein assessed him in about two seconds. “Rookie?”
“Uh-huh.”
“You made the ID?”
“My partner recognized him right away.”
Bernstein raised an eyebrow. “And you didn’t?”
“Not really a sports fan.”
“Heresy, Officer Parks!” Bernstein exclaimed with fake outrage, clutching his chest. “How can you call yourself a Philadelphian?”
Ordinarily this kind of comment out of a detective’s mouth would have rubbed Parks the wrong way. And throughout the brief conversation, most of his attention was on the scene. But something about Bernstein’s delivery that boyish smile and deadpan sarcasm made it okay.
The detective crouched down by the corpse as if he were about to have a little chat with him. So what happened here, buddy? Looks
LION & LAMB 11
like somebody punched your ticket real good. “Something’s missing, Parks.”
“What’s that, Detective?”
“Anyone else come near this crime scene after you arrived?” Only now did Mickey Bernstein give Parks his full attention. He studied her face for tells. His eyes were ice blue and didn’t miss a thing.
Parks felt guilty even though she’d done everything by the book. Damn, this guy was good. “No, Detective,” she assured him. “We kept everyone away.”
“How about the rookie?”
“No, he’s fine.”
Bernstein went back to examining the scene, a sour look on his face.
“What’s missing, Detective?” said Parks. “If you don’t mind me asking.”
“A certain piece of jewelry.”
“All due respect, how could you possibly know that?”
“Do me a favor, Parks. Can you push those crowds back a bit more? I want to take a look in relative peace and quiet.”
“Of course.”
“And, oh the missing piece of jewelry? It’s a Super Bowl ring.”
12
JAMES PATTERSON
FIVE
FOR DECADES, the City of Philadelphia had been promising its hardworking police officers two things: sparkly new headquarters and a state-of-the-art computer system.
Neither had appeared yet. Mickey Bernstein was sitting in the same building, the concrete Roundhouse on Race Street, that his father had worked in years ago. Dad had used an electric typewriter to hunt-and-peck his murder reports, but Mickey didn’t have it much better. He was forced to use a nearly comatose PC with an operating system twenty years out of date.
Eh, screw the things you can’t change, Mickey thought. That was one of many twisted pieces of wisdom from Dad. Mickey cracked his knuckles and got to work.
Philadelphia Police Department / Homicide Division
Case No. 22-9-3275
Investigating Detective: Michael Bernstein
2445 Captain called with a report of a Black male found dead inside sports car in front of art museum.
2450 Notified my partner, Detective T. Mason, #4977, of the murder. She was at least thirty minutes out so I headed to the scene alone. I was already in Center City, just a few minutes away.
13
0100 Arrived at scene. Briefed by Officer Parks, #6332, who was first at scene. Partner: Officer Sheplavy, #8841. Parks reported a man in a gray hoodie in area at the time of her arrival. Witness took photos with a phone and fled scene. Parks did not pursue. See statement, attached.
0130 Coroner investigator V. Waters arrived at scene. Rolled prints of victim identified as Archie Hughes, DOB 12/27/89. Crime lab tech Wolfinger completed photographs. Victim suffered GSW. No shell casings found at scene.
0200 Requested all surveillance video in immediate vicinity.
0241 Coroner took possession of body. Cleared scene.
0437 Made death notification to Hughes’s wife, Francine Hughes, 10XXX Country Club Drive, Radnor, PA.
Which brought Bernstein up to the present, 5:00 in the morning. This was going to be a crazy day, with zero chance of sleep in the foreseeable future. He hit the PRINT key and prayed it worked; Bernstein didn’t want to have to wait for some guy in IT to show up so he could begin the murder book that would define his career.
Small miracle the pages printed without a hitch.
Bernstein saved the file and got up to find a gallon of coffee. Then he stopped. Sat back down. Cracked his knuckles again.
Better to pave the road now and save himself some grief later.
JAMES PATTERSON 14
HIGHLY CONFIDENTAL EYES OF THE POLICE COMMISSIONER ONLY
Madam Commissioner:
The Archie Hughes case is a guaranteed clusterfuck , even if everything goes right. However, I have some thoughts on how we might minimize the damage.
The Eagles quarterback is arguably the most talented pair of hands ever to touch the pigskin. If he’s not the greatest of all time, he’s a serious contender for the title. Archie Hughes’s family, friends, and fans all over the world will demand swift justice. We must give it to them.
I was next up on the wheel for this case, as the captain will confirm. But I understand that this may not sit well with the rank and file, who might assume it was handed to me on a silver platter. Also, full disclosure: I am on friendly terms with Eagles ownership, though I did not know Mr. Hughes personally. Nonetheless, I know I am the best detective for this case, despite the optics.
SIX
15
My suggestion, Madam Commissioner, is that we create a task force. Let the city know we have all hands on deck.
Not only will we have the eyes of the entire city on us, but there will be massive national and international media attention. It’s vital that we have a unified voice giving simple, direct updates on the status of the investigation. I volunteer my services for this role.
As you know, I have excellent relations with the local news outlets and have appeared on national news multiple times over the past ten years.
The truth is, this case will most likely be solved with surveillance cameras, which is how we solve ninety percent of homicides. I’ll be working closely with my colleagues in the Special Investigations Unit to review the footage and we will have answers soon. As my dad liked to say, “We don’t sleep until the killer is tucked neatly into bed.”
Thank you in advance, Madam Commissioner. I hope we can bring this case to a rapid and satisfactory conclusion.
Yours,
Det. Michael Bernstein
PATTERSON 16
JAMES
SEVEN
11:50 a.m.
WINTER LANDSCAPING on Philadelphia’s Main Line was mostly about preventive care. Which was why Mauricio Lopez, fifty-three, had winterized the sprinkler system way back in October and wrapped the young trees to protect them from frost. He’d also fertilized in advance of the first hard freeze. And he made sure to replenish the mulch as needed.
Mauricio insisted on using the leaves he raked up in the fall as mulch in the dead of winter, despite his employer’s wife telling him not to bother, that they could afford to buy a fresh supply. Mauricio told her it was not about the money; it was about the health of the roots beneath the freezing soil. The mulch acted as an insulating blanket. Nature supplied it for free. Why not use it?
Much of that work had been done, so Mauricio had little to do aside from occasionally pruning dead branches and brushing road salt away from the front-facing bushes. Otherwise, daily maintenance of the vast grounds was simply a matter of looking around for anything out of place.
And Mauricio saw something very out of place late Sunday morning.
Any foreign object on the ground almost always turned out to be an errant golf ball from the nearby country club. Sometimes the
17
children in the neighborhood left a baseball or toy. Once Mauricio even found a hobbyist’s drone that had crash-landed near a birdbath. And occasionally, there were dead animals birds, mostly. When Mauricio found them, he quickly disposed of the corpses. If the kids were around, they’d want to hold a funeral. Which was sweet, but it ate up a lot of his workday.
This morning, he noticed a foreign object that was mostly buried in a flower bed. The only reason Mauricio saw it was that the low winter sun glimmered off its surface.
A car, Mauricio thought. The older child had had an obsession with Matchbox sports cars last summer; this had to be one of them.
Mauricio knelt down, hearing his knee joints pop, and brushed away some of the frost and mulch covering the toy. But it wasn’t a little sports car buried in the flower bed.
Mauricio Lopez lived his life largely unplugged. He had a landline so Mrs. Hughes could reach him as needed, but he avoided “smart” devices. He did not own a computer, TV, or radio. He enjoyed reading books about ancient history. He liked to garden.
So when Mauricio arrived for work that morning, he had not heard the news about his employer. For all Mauricio knew, Mr. Hughes was preparing for this evening’s game. In fact, despite his closeness to the family, Mauricio Lopez might very well have been the only person in the tristate area who didn’t know Archie Hughes had been shot and killed in front of the art museum the night before.
But still, the sight of a gun caused him to tremble violently.
JAMES PATTERSON 18
MONDAY, JANUARY 24
CHAPTER 1
7:32 a.m.
AFTER EXECUTING the most perfect display of parallel parking ever seen in the city of Philadelphia, Cooper Lamb realized not a single soul had witnessed it.
Not his ex. Not his children. Not a random passerby. Not even a meter maid, who normally would be on him like a heatseeking missile. If no one saw this private eye’s incredible display of automotive prowess, did it actually happen? It was another bummer in a long string of them.
Lamb fished his phone out of his jacket pocket, hit the memo app his assistant, Victor, had loaded for him, and began to speak. He always felt better when he was talking out loud.
COOPER LAMB / VOICE MEMO #0124-735
Victor, I regret to inform you this is the end of the world. Maybe not your world. But my world, for sure. I am currently sitting in my car trying to process it all. Trying to figure out what I’m going to tell my kids. Damn . . . what am I going to tell my kids?
Don’t transcribe that last part, Victor. Yes, I know you’re not personally transcribing these words, that the computer
21
program you designed is doing all of this automatically. But humor me. I can’t stand the idea of talking to a machine.
So let’s review the facts at hand while I await the arrival of my lovely and brilliant offspring, whom I adore completely.
Fact number one: Eagles starting quarterback and national treasure Archie Hughes was shot to death last night. The entire city is in a state of shock and mourning. We woke up to a different world today, Victor.
Fact number two: The NFC championship game has been postponed for some unknown amount of time. Which means nobody will know what to do with themselves until it’s rescheduled.
Fact number three: I was not in possession of tickets to the game, but maybe this is an opportunity. Victor, can you see if there are tickets available? Possibly something in a box? Maybe some fans won’t be able to make it, they’ll be so heartbroken over the loss of the amazing Mr. Hughes. A guy can dream, right?
Fact number four: On Saturday I placed a fairly sizable bet on the Eagles, of course with my army buddy Red Doyle down in Atlantic City. I was already sick to my stomach knowing I’d have to wait twenty-four hours to see how it turned out, and, more important, if I’d be ducking my landlord for the next two months or not. Now I get to enjoy a full week of anguish and torment. Victor, next time I mention making a bet, talk me out of it.
Fact number five: Speaking of disappointed, at this very moment my kids are running out of their mother’s house and . . . oh, it doesn’t look good. Seems as if the awful news has reached my children’s impressionable ears. To be continued.
PATTERSON 22
JAMES
CHAPTER 2
THE REAR passenger doors of Cooper Lamb’s car were wrenched open and his children climbed into the back of his vehicle with the force of a small hurricane.
“Dad!” his son exclaimed. “Did you hear what happened to Archie Hughes?”
His daughter was already annoyed. “Of course Dad heard. But what I want to know is, who would do something like this the night before the game?”
“Are you going to find Archie’s killer?”
“Are they going to cancel the Super Bowl?”
“Do you already know who killed Archie, Dad?”
Lamb clutched the steering wheel tight to avoid being sucked under and drowning in all that raw emotion.
His wonderful, amazing, and, at times, exasperating children
Ariel, ten, and Cooper Jr., eight lived with their mother in a three-bedroom townhome in trendy Queen Village. Funny how you blink and things become “trendy.” This used to be a solid immigrant neighborhood; Lamb’s own ancestors had toiled at the factory that received sugarcane from the Caribbean and processed it to satisfy America’s never-ending sweet tooth. For years Lamb’s great-grandfather wouldn’t even look at sugar, let alone eat dessert.
23
Happily, that particular family trait went to the grave with the old man. Lamb was starving, and he was sure his kids were too.
“How about a quick before-school breakfast at the Down Home Diner? I could practically inhale a stack of buckwheat pancakes right now.”
“Dad!” Ariel cried. “Are you even listening to us?”
“Just don’t let me drink from the maple syrup container again. Last time I did that, I was up all night.”
“Dad!”
“I was up all night peeing. Very, very slowly .”
“Ewww!” Cooper Jr. said.
“Jesus, Dad.”
Lame dad humor? Guilty as charged. But had Cooper also managed to change the conversation and stanch the flow of tears from his children’s weary eyeballs? Yes, Your Honor. No further questions.
“I will explain all that I know over breakfast at Reading Terminal Market. I don’t care to discuss homicide while driving through Center City. It makes me twitchy. Until then, strap in and start contemplating the menu. I know you two have it memorized by now.”
“Father,” Ariel said solemnly. “You’re trying to distract us with food, but we’re serious. We want to know what’s going on.”
“Daughter, I hear your question, but right now your mother is approaching and she doesn’t look entirely pleased.”
Sure enough, Lamb’s ex, the former and possibly future? love of his life, was approaching the passenger side. Ariel helpfully pushed the button to lower the window.
She had never been Lori Lamb; Lori Avallone thought she wouldn’t be taken seriously at the museum with an alliterative name. Lamb had considered offering to take her name, but Cooper Avallone sounded like a country-and-western lounge singer, so that was out.
24
JAMES PATTERSON
“Don’t worry, I’m taking the kids to breakfast,” Lamb said.
“They already ate,” Lori replied. “It’s almost eight, and they have to be at Friends Select in twenty minutes. For future reference, the school frowns on the kids cutting first period to eat waffles.”
“We do it all the time!” Cooper Jr. said.
“When we’re with Daddy, we do,” Ariel confirmed.
“You were supposed to be here an hour ago,” Lori said.
“I was wrapping up a case.”
“Does this ‘case’ have a name?”
“The People versus Cooper Lamb. Because people are always getting on my case.”
Cooper Jr. knew he shouldn’t laugh at that, but a giggle escaped his lips anyway.
“Thank you, son,” his father said, turning and lifting his hand for a high five. The look on his ex’s face, however, revealed exactly zero amusement. Both Cooper Sr. and Cooper Jr. put their hands down.
“I’m sorry, Lori. I’ll do better.” Lamb searched her eyes for a reaction but failed to find the one he’d hoped for. “I mean it.”
Thing was, Lamb actually did mean it. If this was the end of the world, and it was sure looking that way, he’d better start getting his act together.
But first, pancakes thick and fluffy enough to choke a horse. Book learning could wait.
LION & LAMB 25
CHAPTER 3
11:02 a.m.
“JUST SIT back and relax.”
“I am perfectly relaxed.”
“Oh, and you can take your sunglasses off.”
“I know I can. I prefer not to.”
“Um, is it too early for a nice glass of wine? We have red and white.”
“Red and white, huh. Tempting, but I don’t like to drink while I’m working.”
The girl in the disposable face mask and nitrile gloves smiled. Or at least, her eyes smiled. “But are you working right now?”
“I don’t know. Are you?”
Veena Lion knew that was probably too much, but the young nail tech had lost all credibility with the wine thing. Red or white? Then again, maybe she was expecting too much from a random Korean nail joint on this end of Chestnut Street.
Veena liked to change things up, rarely visiting the same salon twice in a season. Mostly because she resisted the idea of having a regular place where people could easily find her. That ruined the indulgence of having her nails done in the middle of the morning.
26
Said indulgence lasted for another seventy-five seconds before Veena Lion’s phone alerted her to an incoming call. She lifted a hand from the manicurist’s table and tapped the bud in her ear twice.
A haughty voice spoke. “This is the district attorney’s office. Is this Veena Lion?”
“What is this concerning?”
“You’ll have to speak with the district attorney about that.”
Veena sighed. “Why don’t you spare me the suspense.”
“As I said,” the voice continued, barely containing the speaker’s annoyance, “you’ll have to talk to the dis ”
Veena tapped the earbud, ending the call. She exhaled slowly, letting the tension leave her body. The girl in the mask raised her eyebrows. Veena held up her index finger: Wait for it. Her phone buzzed again.
“Apologies, Ms. Lion please don’t hang up!”
“Who is this?”
“It’s the district attorney’s office! This is about Archie Hughes. Might you have a moment or two to speak with Mr. Mostel?”
“Let Mr. Mostel know that I’ll stop by his office at my earliest convenience.”
“Couldn’t you spare a moment now?”
“Right now,” Veena said, “is not convenient.”
Veena ended the call. Waited. The phone did not buzz a third time. The girl in the mask raised her eyebrows again. Veena shrugged. The girl in the mask resumed her work. “You know what? I believe I will have some wine.”
“Red or white?”
“Consider what you know about me, then follow your instincts.”
The nail girl’s mask twisted up, barely hiding the wry smile beneath. “I thought you didn’t drink while you were working.”
LION & LAMB 27
JAMES PATTERSON
“Sometimes it’s absolutely necessary. And sometimes happens to be right now.”
While Veena waited for her beverage, she tapped her earbud three times.
28
CHAPTER 4
Transcript of encrypted message exchange between private investigator
VEENA LION: Looks like we’re getting the Archie Hughes case from that dirtbag Mostel. I hate the creep, but how can we resist something like this?
JANIE HALL: Hang on. You sure about this, boss? Do you remember the document you signed swearing you’d never, ever work for the DA again?
LION: This is different.
HALL: You had me notarize that document.
LION: Ha, that’s right. I did, didn’t I?
HALL: Not only that, but you had me become a notary just so I could notarize that document. There was a course, a written exam, a background check, not to mention the fees
LION: Thereby giving you a lucrative side hustle. You’re welcome.
HALL: My point is, you were pretty sure about never working with DA Mostel again.
LION: Point taken, but this is the Archie Hughes case. There is no other case right now. This is the Beale and Adderall of murder cases.
Veena Lion and her executive assistant, Janie Hall
29
HALL: Are you speaking your texts again? Did you mean the be-all and end-all?
LION: My fingers are occupied at the moment.
HALL: Ah, nice. Which color did you pick?
LION: You’ll see in about twenty minutes when I’m back at the office. In the meantime
HALL: In the meantime you would like me to compile every possible scrap of coverage and footage from the past thirty-six hours as well as the usual deep-background dossier on Mr. Hughes and all of his known business associates.
LION: And everything the police have. Did you get that last part, Janie?
HALL: Oh, I see Detective Mickey Bernstein is on the case.
LION: Easy there, lady.
HALL: Yum.
LION: Archie Hughes files first, flirt with the handsome detective later.
HALL: Yes, boss. Anything else?
LION: A triple draft latte from La Colombe, please.
HALL: Cold espresso? You know it’s like two degrees outside, right?
LION: I have to swallow an ingestible recorder capsule and it goes down easier with something cold.
HALL: Is that a good idea, Veena?
LION: The latte or the hidden recording device?
HALL: Either. But especially the device.
LION: It will dissolve in a few hours, you know that. Just make sure the file has uploaded to the server and have a transcription prepared.
HALL: What I mean is, if Mostel finds out
LION: I’m after the truth, no matter what state privacy laws say. Also, that pompous windbag won’t suspect a thing.
30
JAMES PATTERSON
CHAPTER 5
Transcript of conversation between Veena Lion and Philadelphia district attorney Eliott K. Mostel
ELIOTT K. MOSTEL: So, to be clear, you’re prepared to swear on a Holy Bible that you don’t have a tape recorder on you? Like, anywhere?
VEENA LION: Do you see a recording device anywhere, Eliott?
MOSTEL: I’m not falling for that again, Veena. You tape everything I found out the hard way, if you recall. I’m thinking of the Gillespie case specifically.
LION: I recall the Gillespie case. Specifically. And I never used the tape in court.
MOSTEL: I just want to make it clear that if you do have such a device and this conversation is being recorded right now, it’s a felony. Pennsylvania takes privacy law seriously.
LION: Do you want to send me to jail or do you have a job for me?
MOSTEL: At times I find you needlessly infuriating, Veena. Do you know that?
LION: How about we skip the flattery and get down to it.
MOSTEL: Can you at least take off the sunglasses? I’d like to see your eyes as you insult me.
31
LION: No.
MOSTEL: You drive me [unintelligible].
LION: That makes two of us, Mr. District Attorney. Please continue.
MOSTEL: As you know, we’re going to have to eventually prosecute the son of a bitch who killed Archie Hughes. I want an airtight case, and I’d like your help.
LION: I’ll do it on one condition. Just a simple question, but I want the truth.
MOSTEL: Ask away.
LION: Was I your first call or was Cooper Lamb?
MOSTEL: Veena, how long have we worked together? You know you are my first and only choice when it comes to these kinds of cases.
LION: Eliott, there’s never been a case like this. And I want to know where your head is at. If Lamb turned you down and I’m merely your backup
MOSTEL: I swear to Jesus, you were my first call.
LION: You’re Jewish.
MOSTEL: Can we please focus on the murder of one of our most beloved and high-profile citizens?
LION: Fine. I’ll take the assignment. I’m going to need a direct line to your office, someone on call twenty-four/seven, preferably one of your top ADAs. Real-time updates, with my executive assistant blind-copied on every piece of correspondence.
MOSTEL: Done, done, and done. And naturally you’ll have access to everything the police know in real time.
LION: I’m more interested in what the police don’t know.
MOSTEL: What a coincidence. That’s what interests me the most too.
LION: Afraid I’m not following you, Eliott.
MOSTEL: (Pause) I’m going to be frank with you. Mickey Bernstein
PATTERSON 32
JAMES
pushed his way onto this case and I don’t like that. Frankly, I don’t like him.
LION: Sounds a little personal.
MOSTEL: No, what I mean is, I don’t trust him. He’s dirty, just like his old man. Everything he touches is tainted. He and his family are symbols of how corrupt this city used to be. We don’t live in that city anymore.
LION: So prosecute him.
MOSTEL: Yeah, you try getting past the big blue wall. Especially when it’s led by Her Majesty the commissioner, who is too focused on her path to the mayor’s office to care about the carnage on the streets.
LION: You don’t think the commissioner is keeping her eye on the ball?
MOSTEL: Look, forget I said anything and see, this is why I’m paranoid about you taping every single conversation. Let’s keep this about Archie Hughes.
LION: Agreed. (Pause) Oh, and Janie, you can stop the transcription here.
MOSTEL: What? Who are you talking to? You said you weren’t recording this!
LION: Just a little joke, Eliott. Tell me what you have.
LION & LAMB 33